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During peak season Lake Nakuru, in southwestern Kenya, hosts between one and two million flamingos. It’s a gathering that has been described as the greatest bird spectacle on Earth.

Flamingos. Photo credit: Amrita Ronnachit

Flamingos flock to the lake to feed on its algae. The algae grows there partly because the lake is shallow and alkaline – conditions that algae thrive in – but also because there is so much bird poop in the water. It’s a chicken and egg paradox.

Lake Nakuru National Park

Southern white rhino. Photo credit: Amrita Ronnachit

But Lake Nakuru National Park supports more than just birds. In fact the park has been considered a refuge for imperilled animals since the 1970s. The first refugees to Nakuru were a bunch of Rothschild’s Giraffes. Eastern White Rhinoceros followed. And Eastern Black Rhinoceros came behind them. Nakuru now has one of the highest concentrations of black rhinos in Africa.

Photo credit: Amrita Ronnachit

The refugees were brought here to guard them from poachers. An electrified fence keeps the poachers out. Unfortunately the fence also restricts the animal’s movements, and prohibits migratory species from wandering through the park. Further expansions of the park’s boundaries are under consideration.

Photo credit: Amrita Ronnachit

Ever wondered how much a rhinoceros poops? Me too.

Now I know.

Water buck. Photo credit: Amrita Ronnachit

The electric fence also allows the national park to extend right up to the edge of Nakuru township. Humans and wild animals living side-by-side, free of conflict over food and land. All thanks to the fence.

Cape Buffalo. Photo credit: Amrita Ronnachit

Speaking of dangerous animals, Cape Buffalo are a cantankerous creature at the best of times, but the ones in Nakuru are particularly nasty. Each buffalo we passed made it clear they intended to run us down if we came anywhere near them. Keep your distance from these brutes.

Marabou Stork. Photo credit: Amrita Ronnachit

The Marabou Stork is my favourite bird in Africa. It’s the Grim Reaper of birds. The baby-delivering-stork that turned bad and now deals crack on the street corner.

Baboon eating a springbok. Photo credit: Amrita Ronnachit

We pulled up alongside this Olive Baboon as we noticed it was eating something peculiar. It’s lunchtime meal turned out to be a baby gazelle. I’ve heard they also eat the flamingos.

Agama lizard. Photo credit: Amrita Ronnachit

Think taking part in a safari takes extensive planning, preparation, and cost?

Well, it doesn’t. Just arrive in Nakuru the night before your intended visit to the park. Ask around the hotels and restaurants and you’ll find someone willing to take you into the national park in their car. It’ll cost about the same as hiring a taxi for the day. You might want to inspect the car first.

Lake Nakuru viewed from Baboon Cliff. Photo credit: Amrita Ronnachit

Nakuru is only 160 kilometres from Nairobi, so it can be done as a long day trip if desired. The best time to be in the park is early morning though, so it’s better to overnight in Nakuru.

Flamingos feeding in the shallow water of Lake Nakuru. Photo credit: Benjamin White

Water levels dropped alarmingly in the 1990s, and there was concern that decades of deforestation, urbanisation, and conversion of woodland to crop-based agriculture in Kenya, along with climate change, had irreversibly altered the environmental conditions that created Lake Nakuru.

Photo credit: Amrita Ronnachit

Water levels have increased again in recent years, but the same threat remains, and climate change is inescapable. All the more reason to start planning that trip to Lake Nakuru now.

2 thoughts on “Lake Nakuru, Kenya – two million flamingos all pooping in one lake”

We better start planning!! That was a big poop! I’m not sure I like your grim reaper bird, it sounds and looks very grim, certainly. Great. Photos again and what another interesting spot.
Kazzieandkitty

Marabou storks look nasty, but they’re probably quite sweet once you get to know them. 🙂

Benjamin White

Benjamin White is a long, long, long term traveller. He has spent 6 of the last 12 years backpacking, travelling, working and living abroad, primarily in developing and underdeveloped countries. He travelled through Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan in 2015. The first half of 2016 was spent travelling through Peru, Colombia, and Central America; the second half spent living on a small island in Papua New Guinea called Daru. In 2017 he achieved one of his lifetime goals when he entered his 100th country. Lifetime goal accomplished, he now plans to take time off to travel.